"...determination is the key to success in politics, in the broadest sense of the word. You don't need many resources to make your voice heard when you are defending a cause you believe to be just..." Padre André Sibomana

Four Spanish nationals were killed in Rwanda after the turmoil unleashed in 1994 following the assassination of President Juvenal Habyarimana. The Spanish court tied the now ruling Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) to the killings of the Spanish nationals.

Other top Rwanda officers indicted by the Spanish court include General James Kabarebe--for a total of 40 top Rwanda officers.
Gen. Kagame, a sitting president, was not indicted.

Gen. Nyamwasa had a falling out with Gen. Kagame earlier this year and fled to South Africa in February. He later survived an assasination attempt and his wife claimed Gen. Kagame's government was behind the botched hit. After he survived being shot as he pulled into his home in a car,South African intelligence agents captured another hit squad that was on its way to finish off Nyamwasa on his hospital bed.

Rwanda's Kagame has been on the defensive since returning to office in widely discredited elections in August. Several candidates were murdered, prevented from registering or placed under house arrest in the run-up to the voting.

The United Nations is also set to publish a report in October detailing acts of genocide by Kagame's army when it pursued

Hutu refugees into Congo after the 1994 upheaval, when the RPF seized power